Bill Gates claimed the movie “Outbreak,” an action film in which the US government quarantines and plots to nuke a small town infected with a deadly Ebola variant, “nails it” as a model to prevent another pandemic.
That’s the mindset of this globalist sociopath.
“Movies like Outbreak nailed it when they imagined a global disease-fighting team who is ready to respond to a crisis on a moment’s notice. Now we need to make it a reality,” Gates tweeted Sunday, including an article by The Economist explaining his proposal for a pandemic mobilization unit he calls GERM (Global Epidemic Response and Mobilisation).
Movies like Outbreak nailed it when they imagined a global disease-fighting team who is ready to respond to a crisis on a moment’s notice. Now we need to make it a reality. https://t.co/Yn22HFLMwx
— Bill Gates (@BillGates) May 22, 2022
Infowars reported:
For those unfamiliar with the 1995 movie, actors Dustin Hoffman and Morgan Freeman portray a military team of infectious disease researchers tasked with uncovering the origins of a deadly outbreak in a small northwestern town before the US government opts to nuke the entire area to cover up evidence of its bioweapons development responsible for the outbreak.
Naturally, online critics quickly pointed out the insanity underpinning Gates’ outlandish remark.
“In Outbreak, the government tries to bomb a small town to cover up it’s development of a deadly virus as a bio-weapon. Nice reference, Bill,” one user quipped.
In Outbreak, the government tries to bomb a small town to cover up it’s development of a deadly virus as a bio-weapon.
Nice reference, Bill. https://t.co/iJ9qiW3z1s
— El Kabong (@El_Kabong81) May 23, 2022
“The government’s plan in that movie was to bomb an American city.”
The government's plan in that movie was to bomb an American city. https://t.co/htzU03jLCt
— Stephen L. Miller (@redsteeze) May 23, 2022
“It took Dustin Hoffman defying orders and breaking chain of command to keep an entire city of American citizens from being wiped out by a military operation. And even then, only because a little girl struck up a friendship with an escaped monkey. You really need to go away,” one user stressed.
https://twitter.com/banishedprotein/status/1528744095916511232?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1528744095916511232%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.infowars.com%2F
Under Gates’ proposal, his “GERM” team would operate under the auspices of the World Health Organization and be deployed to any area where outbreaks occur.
“He suggests creating a global ‘fire brigade’ of 3,000 experts scattered around the world, recruited for skills ranging from epidemiology and genetics, through drug and vaccine development and computer modelling, to diplomacy,” The Economist reported. “This outfit, which would probably work under the auspices of the World Health Organisation, would remain on permanent standby, ready to respond to any detected outbreak.”
Gates’ bizarre comment also comes amid an unprecedented outbreak of monkeypox in numerous Western nations over the last few weeks, just as the World Health Organization holds an assembly this week in Geneva to discuss the adoption of a globalist Pandemic Treaty by 194 nations.
The Economist wrote:
Sexually transmitted infections, though, spread slowly. Airborne ones spread fast—particularly in an era of mass international travel. Early detection is vital, and is the first item on Mr Gates’s list of things to accomplish. Others include helping people protect themselves; finding new treatments; and developing vaccines. And practice drills: he is big on the idea that, just as military forces drill and earthquake-response teams drill, so should those tasked with combating pandemics.
But who should those people be? That is the nub of the book. Armed forces and civil-defence teams are national responsibilities. But pathogens know no borders, and governments, in any case, are curiously uninterested in contingency planning for new diseases. While covid-19 remains fresh in people’s minds, Mr Gates sees an opportunity to correct this.
He suggests creating a global “fire brigade” of 3,000 experts scattered around the world, recruited for skills ranging from epidemiology and genetics, through drug and vaccine development and computer modelling, to diplomacy. This outfit, which would probably work under the auspices of the World Health Organisation, would remain on permanent standby, ready to respond to any detected outbreak.
Mr Gates tentatively proposes that it be called (Global Epidemic Response and Mobilisation). The department might not like the name, but the idea is worth exploring. He estimates itself would cost about $1bn a year. While waiting for the call, its staff would be employed in beefing up the world’s anti-pandemic infrastructure—this is where the diplomacy would come in—by chivvying governments into the necessary spending on detecting, monitoring and suppressing potential outbreaks. And in running drills.
On the technological side, his shopping list includes designing and agreeing on protocols for the rapid mass-testing of drugs that might work against a particular pathogen if an outbreak did happen. (Britain’s trial, which was ready to go within six weeks of covid-19 being identified, and eventually included 40,000 participants at 185 sites, comes in for particular praise here.) Mr Gates also wants to improve both vaccine manufacturing and distribution, and to improve vaccines themselves, particularly by eliminating cold chains.
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